GeneralHelp from Honda historians: late 80s Honda concept car

Hi:
For the last while I have been looking for a Honda concept car from the late 80s. It wasn´t one of their sleek and speedy designs, but a concept for a city hatchback. What was noteable about it was the design of the rear. It featured a reverse-rake c-pillar of the type you see quite commonly now on estate and hatchback. Examples include the Peugeot 407 SW, the first Mercedes A-class and the current Hyundai i10. The idea is to make the rear screen look like it wraps around from the back to the side. In reality all the supporting D or C pillar is still there, under the glass. And the frame of the rear window on the tailgate is still there too. I wonder if anyone knows the name of this Honda. I have tried a variety of Google searches without effect. the "concept car" part summons loads of irrelevant concept cars from the recent past.
Little did they know it but Honda spawnd a very common design theme and I want to write something about its use in the last two decades.
Thanks if you can help out with this!

Alas none of those. I remember the period was 1987-1990. It was a concept not a production car. It was a small city hatchback.
I have attached three images of the 1997 Mercedes A-class which has the same pillar design. One shows the detail highlighted in red.
The last shows the car as might have looked with a more conventional side glass graphics. Now I have done it I think the D-pillar should be thicker.
But you will get the idea.

Remarkable. I do admire Japanese creativity. Some it it is nuts but often it´s thrilling. The fact the UK car magazines play almost no attention to the Japanese market (though they did up to the 90s) is a disappointment. Have you seen some of Daihatsu and Suzuki´s concept car work?
I am off to bed now. Thanks for anyone who offers some pointers in this direction. Does anyone think the A-class looks better with a conventional side glass graphic? I do. I do like Honda but their wraparoun rear windscreen ideas was one Honda idea I wish nobody had copied!